A report on women, security and peace were drafted by Mlambo-Ngcuka to the UN Security Council that celebrates its annual open debate over the issue, report source.

Director Mlambo-Ngcuka claims that the report is “loud alarm bell” on systematic failures.

Between the year 1990 to 2017, women constituted 2 percent of mediators only and 98 percent of negotiators and 5 percent of signatories and witness in major peace processes, as per the report of UN figures.

She continued that “Only three out of 11 agreements signed in 2017 contained provisions on gender equality, continuing last year’s worrisome downward trend,” and also expressed her concern over the absence of women during the time of current negotiations in Yemen and limited presence in Mali, Afghanistan and the Central African Republic.

UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres has highlighted several studies, which depict links between women participation and peace that urges the international community to continued efforts towards the achievement of full gender equality, similar to that of men.

The UN Secretary further said that 41 percent approx of Joint Chiefs and Chiefs in the peace operation are now women added that such share had never reached before.

US President Donald Trump extremely lashed out at the top Democrat Nancy Pelosi on Sunday and she insisted one more that he put off government shutdown before the border security discussions can start, but there were chances for possible activity. Trump attacked Twitter, after the White House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, cancelled as a “non-starter” his offer for extending provisional safeguard to about a million immigrants in feedback for $5.7 billion...